Jane Goldman

Jane Loretta Anne Goldman (born 11 June 1970 in Hammersmith, London) is an English screenwriter, author, model and television presenter. Between 2003 and 2004 she fronted her own paranormal series, Jane Goldman Investigates, on the channel Living.

Jane Loretta Anne Goldman (born 11 June 1970 in Hammersmith, London) is an English screenwriter, author, model and television presenter. Between 2003 and 2004 she fronted her own paranormal series, Jane Goldman Investigates, on the channel Living.

Goldman first became romantically involved with TV presenter Jonathan Ross when she was a 16-year-old pop columnist for the Daily Star newspaper, and married him in 1988, when she was 18. They have since had three children: Betty Kitten (named after Bettie Page) born July 1991, Harvey Kirby (named after comic book artist Jack Kirby) born March 1994 and Honey Kinny born February 1997. The family lives in Hampstead, London, England.

Jane Goldman worked as a staff writer on the multi-format computer games magazine Zero, circa 1990-1992. Whilst pregnant with Betty Kitten, she earned the nick name 'baby factory' in one of the staff features.

Goldman wrote the novel Dreamworld, four non-fiction books for young adults, and the non-fiction, two-volume series The X-Files Book of the Unexplained, about the American television show. Goldman appears as a character in author Neil Gaiman's short story "The Facts in the Case of the Disappearance of Miss Finch" (1996). She was the cowriter of the screenplay for Stardust, based on Gaiman's novel, for which she won the 2008 Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form. She also has two other screenplays currently in production: a thriller entitled The Debt and an action entitled Kick-Ass, a movie adaption of Mark Millar's comic.

In June 2008 she was named Film-Maker of the Year at Glamour magazine's Women of the Year awards.

Goldman takes on several paranormal topics in her series, Jane Goldman Investigates. She has individual episodes about several aspects of the paranormal, including ghosts, clairvoyance, astrology and dowsing. She takes a very hands-on approach, attempting to perform many of the tasks she's investigating, such as tarot card-reading and astrology. She dedicates one month to each topic, begins meeting with experts in each field and at the end of each month is given a final test to see how well she has grasped the subject matter. Goldman also looks at the scientific side of each subject and conducts experiments to further her investigation. For example, she set up an experiment with rune readings to see if people could pick their specific reading out of a group of many. While most of her shows are light-hearted and fun, a few delve into darker aspects of the paranormal, such as voodoo curses and poltergeists. She did a monthly column in Total Guitar, where she was taught to play guitar by a professional musician.

K. Tempest Bradford drove Jane Goldman off Twitter? Tempest seems to be taking the credit in Community Responses To The Jonathan Ross Hugo Host Debacle – Part 1 | K. Tempest Bradford. I agree with her that Seanan McGuire is nice, but I have to point out that nice people ...